Two new leaders in internal medicine to arrive Feb. 1

Peter Mannon, M.D., and Roslyn (Roz) Mannon, M.D., will join the University of Nebraska Medical Center Department of Internal Medicine in leadership roles on Feb 1. Both currently hold positions at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
 
Dr. Peter Mannon has been named chief of the Division of Gastroenterology/Hepatology in the University of Nebraska Medical Center Department of Internal Medicine. He also will direct the Paustian Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center.
 
Dr. Roslyn Mannon will join the UNMC Department of Internal Medicine as associate chief for research in the Division of Nephrology and as vice chair of research mentoring and academic development for the department. Her clinical and research expertise is kidney transplantation.
 
Both held titles at Duke University Medical Center, N.C., Veteran’s Administration Medical Center, Durham, N.C., National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, M.D., and Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, M.D.
 
An accomplished clinician and inflammatory bowel disease researcher, Dr. Peter Mannon is a professor of microbiology and director of the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center and Gastroenterology/Hepatology Clinical Research Program at UAB.
 
“Dr. Peter Mannon is an ideal person to lead our Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology forward,” said Deb Romberger, M.D., Henry J. Lehnhoff Professor and chair of the UNMC Department of Internal Medicine. “We have a division with a history of providing an amazing amount of clinical work while very committed to providing quality education and new knowledge through research. I look forward to all the division will accomplish with Dr. Mannon.
 
“I am very grateful to Dr. Fedja Rochling who is doing an outstanding job as the interim chief of the division for his leadership in this time of transition,” she said.
 
Dr. Peter Mannon said it’s an honor to join a program renowned for its expertise in short gut syndrome, liver and small bowel transplantation and chronic liver diseases.
 
“The opportunity to expand the inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) clinical and research mission with the resources from UNMC and the Paustian Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center is unparalleled,” he said. “It will ensure that UNMC becomes widely recognized for its contributions to care and cures. I also look forward to building a link to the Food for Health research program at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. It will establish science-based food-focused treatment strategies as future therapies for gastrointestinal and other diseases.”
 
Troy Plumb, M.D., Dr. Dennis Ross Chair and chief of the UNMC Division of Nephrology, said Dr. Roz Mannon is a national leader in kidney transplantation and her expertise as a researcher and mentor make her ideal for the position.
 
“We are excited for Roz to join us,” Dr. Plumb said. “Her expertise and contributions will be key to developing a nationally recognized nephrology research group. She possesses unique skillsets, exceling as both a clinician and research investigator.”
 
Dr. Roz Mannon, currently professor of medicine and surgery and section chief for transplant nephrology at UAB, said she is delighted to join UNMC to be part of an amazing institution.
 
“From the moment I stepped on campus, I felt quite welcome and sensed the dedication of the staff to improving the health of Nebraskans,” she said. “I’m excited to have an opportunity to utilize my unique abilities in kidney transplant research both at the bench and at the bedside.”
 
Peter Mannon, M.D.
1979 – Latin/English Dual Moderatorship, Trinity College, Dublin
1983 – Bachelor’s degree, biology with medical degree, Boston University M.D., Boston University School of Medicine
2000 – M.P.H., epidemiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
 
Internship and residency
Duke University Medical Center; internship and residency in internal medicine, clinical fellow, gastroenterology
The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore; research fellow, gastroenterology
 
Research focus
Inflammatory bowel disease and immune response
 
Rosalyn (Roz) Mannon, M.D.
1981 – Bachelor’s degree in biology, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore
1985 – M.D., Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, N.C.
 
Internship and residency
Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, N.C., internship, residency (chief resident) and nephrology fellowship
 
Research focus
Mechanisms of chronic graft injury using in vitro and using rodent models of drug toxicity and kidney transplantation.
 
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